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| Internalist
vs. Externalist Interpretations of African History and Culture |
SORAC
2002 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
CALL
FOR PAPERS |
Date: November
7, 8 and 9, 2002
Deadline: Abstracts must be submitted by August 30, 2002.
Place: Montclair State University, New Jersey
Keynote
Speakers
Binghamton University
"Africa Between Westernization
and Islamization: Penetration and Response"
American University
"Biting Their Own Tails: African Leaders and the
Internalist Intricacies of the Rape of a Continent."
Friday, November 8,
Ballroom AA/AB, Student Center, 6:00pm
In the past
twenty years or so since the 1980's, two schools of Africanist
scholarship have slowly developed that, today, are dividing
scholars and intellectuals of African descent all over the
world.
The first
school, that of the externalists, has continually blamed the
general debacle of Africa and the people of African descent on
the West. In Africa, this group has argued that Africa's
socio-cultural, economic and political-institutional problems
can be directly linked and attributed to the past and current
actions--some overt, others hidden--of the West, actions that
have had long-lasting and debilitating effects on the continent.
In the diaspora, this group has seen the White man and his
explicit and/or insidious racism as the root cause not only of
African people's enslavement, but also of their dehumanization
and exclusion at the cultural, economic and political levels.
However, due to a general disillusionment that has left many
disappointed at African leadership and its corrupt ways, a new
school, that of the Internalists, has gradually voiced its
opposition to a view that sees only external forces behind all
the problematic issues facing African people around the world
today. In Africa, this school has argued that the causes of
Africa's challenges at the cultural, economic and political
levels are to be found in Africa itself, not in the West. Their
argument is that the historically-negative role that the West
played in Africa is not sufficient to explain the corruption,
civil wars and power struggles that are going on in Africa today
because of African peoples' own actions and greed. In the
diaspora, this group argues that Africans alone must be held
responsible for the slave trade because they freely sold their
own into slavery. The group also opposes Reparations claims and
Affirmative Action policies in the US, and suggests that African
people should start to acknowledge their own historical and
contemporary failures and wake up to the multifarious challenges
of the third millennium.
SORAC calls for papers in all fields of African and related
studies (history, anthropology, literature, language, culture,
sociology, politics, gender, black studies, religion, etc.
Cross-cultural and comparative approaches are also welcome) that
would critically look at the history of Africa and its diaspora
with a view to shedding light on either one of these positions.
All periods of African and diasporic histories and their
interactions with the outside world (ancient, precolonial,
colonial, post-independence, etc.) may be explored. It will also
be good for speakers to offer possible solutions to the various
issues raised.
Deadline for
Receipt of Abstracts:
If
you propose to give a paper, we must receive your abstract by August
30, 2002.
Submit a
300-500 words abstract summarizing the content of your
presentation. Acceptance
notices will be sent out to submitters as abstracts are
received. Speakers will be given 30 minutes, including question
time, for their talks.
- Include
your contact information and affiliation (address, title,
university or institution, phone, fax, email, etc.)
-
Acceptance notices will be sent out to submitters as abstracts
are received.
Note: We usually seek to
publish papers presented at our conferences either in our own SORAC
Journal of African Studies, or in a collective, edited book.
If your paper is ready at the time of the conference, please
bring it with you on a computer disk. Provide three (3) copies
of your paper alongside your disk. Follow the MLA guidelines for
your paper. Notes must be endnotes, and paper must include a
section of Works Cited.
Abstracts May
Be Submitted By:
E-mail: mengarad@mail.montclair.edu - Post mail: in the form of both a computer disk and
a hard copy (Microsoft word or WordPerfect). If sending abstract
by email, do not send email attachments as we will not open these (danger of viruses). Simply
cut and paste your text in your email. Mail your abstract to:
Dr. Daniel Mengara, Executive Director SORAC, French Department,
Montclair State University, Upper Montclair, New Jersey 07043
(USA). Check our Web site for updates: http://chss2.montclair.edu/sorac.
If mailing your abstract, please be sure to include a
self-addressed envelope with appropriate postage. Abstracts submitted
without a self-addressed (stamped) envelope will not be
considered (except when mailed from outside the US.)
For
planning purposes we ask that you (accepted speakers or
attendants) pre-register (early) for the conference (and
banquet) by returning the form on the reverse of
this flyer, along with the registration fee, by September 30,
2002. Mail both to: The Institute for the Humanities,
Montclair State University, Room 101 Dickson Hall, Upper
Montclair, New Jersey 07043.
The registration fee for this conference is US$75.00
for Non-SORAC
members and US$65.00
for current SORAC members. The fee includes the banquet dinner
with the guest speakers and attendance at all of the conference
sessions. The
registration fee for students,
which does NOT include the banquet
is US$35.00. Make checks or money
orders (U.S. or Canadian) payable to SORAC/MSU. If you are coming from abroad, please pay by check drawn on a
U.S. bank or by international money order.
See the registration form.
The
conference will be held on the campus of Montclair State
University, New Jersey, located 30 minutes west of midtown
Manhattan and easily accessible by ground transportation from
there, or from Newark and JFK airports. Relatively inexpensive
hotel accommodations will be made available close to campus. For further information, visit
our Directions &
Accommodations
page for updates
You
may contact the following people for more information on the
conference:
Mrs. Sally
Garson,
Administrative Assistant, 973-655-7516, garsons@mail.montclair.edu
Dr.
Rabia Redouane, 973-655-7421,
redouaner@mail.montclair.edu
Dr. Daniel Mengara, 973-655-5143,
mengarad@mail.montclair.edu
CONFERENCE PRE-REGISTRATION FORM
Please be sure to complete all information
Name:
Mailing
Address:
(zip code)
Institution
Affiliation:
E-mail
Address:
Telephone
No.:
Fax No.:
Are you also
planning to present a paper?
(circle one)
YES
NO
Title of Proposed Paper:
Will you
require any special audio/visual equipment in conjunction
with your presentation? (slide projector, overhead, video or
VCR, other) Please list:
Are you
planning to attend the banquet with our keynote speakers on
November 8th? (circle one) YES NO
If your
register BY September 30, 2002:
Registration
Fee Enclosed: Non-SORAC Member (US$75.00):
SORAC Member (US$65.00):
Student (US$35.00- does not include banquet):
If your
register AFTER September 30, 2002:
Registration
Fee Enclosed: Non-SORAC Member (US$95.00):
SORAC Member (US$80.00):
Student (US$40.00- does not include banquet):
Make checks payable to: SORAC/MSU. Return this form along
with your registration fee, by September 30, 2002, to: The
Institute for the Humanities, Montclair State University, Room
101 Dickson Hall, Upper Montclair, New Jersey 07043.
NOTE: For those who are abroad, we
may accept payment via Western Union. Simply make sure all fees
are paid by yourself and that the final amount to reach us is
equal to the exact registration fee. Contact us for details.
Sponsors:
Global
Education, Montclair State University
Institute for the Humanities, Montclair State University
College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Montclair
State University
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| Now
available!! |
Images
of Africa: Stereotypes and Realities
(Africa World Press, 2001). Details...
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SORAC
Journal of African Studies (Volume 2,
November 2002). Details...
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SORAC
Journal of African Studies (Volume 1,
April 2000). Details...
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